Gerry Lee King Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 27, 2015
Docket05-14-01138-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Gerry Lee King Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

MODIFY and AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed October 27, 2015.

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-14-01138-CR

GERRY LEE KING JR., Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 6 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F13-25625-X

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Lang-Miers, Brown, and Schenck Opinion by Justice Lang-Miers Appellant, Gerry Lee King Jr., pleaded not guilty to aggravated assault with a deadly

weapon. A jury found him guilty and assessed his punishment at five years’ imprisonment.

Appellant argues on appeal that the evidence is insufficient to support the conviction. In a cross-

issue, the State argues that the judgment should be modified to include an affirmative finding of

family violence. For the reasons that follow, we modify the judgment and affirm as modified.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

At the time of the offense, appellant and the complainant were boyfriend/girlfriend and

she was eight months pregnant with appellant’s child. The complainant and her sister lived with

their aunt in an apartment in Garland. On the Wednesday before Thanksgiving in 2013, the

complainant invited appellant to come over and stay the night because her family was out of

town. (The family did not allow appellant to stay at the apartment because he and the complainant had a history of arguing and fighting.) When appellant came over, he saw the

complainant’s sister’s Facebook page on a laptop computer in the kitchen and became angry that

the sister was communicating with the complainant’s ex-boyfriend. Appellant confronted the

complainant about the Facebook posts. Appellant began to push and hit the complainant.

The complainant “knew [appellant] done had a couple of fights and arguments about [the

ex-boyfriend] before. So I just – I knew what it was going to lead to . . . .” 1 She “grabbed a

knife” from the kitchen with the intention of scaring appellant away. She said they had never

used weapons before when they fought, but the thing that made this fight different was because

she “was pregnant and so I was kind of trying to scare him away so he wouldn’t hurt the baby.”

They fought over the knife, and appellant took the knife away from the complainant and

“threatened to cut [her].” While appellant was holding the handle of the knife, the complainant

“grabbed [the knife] by the blade [and] held it for a long time.” Then, knowing that the

complainant was holding the blade with her hand, appellant pulled the knife out of her hand,

cutting her fingers and palm; she said it hurt. Appellant also poked the complainant’s stomach

with the knife, leaving a two-inch cut. 2

The complainant saw a cell phone in the living room that her sister’s friend had left and

used it to dial 911. But she and appellant started fighting again and when the operator answered,

the complainant did not respond and in the fight dropped the phone on the floor. The 911

operator dispatched the police to the apartment complex and recorded fifteen minutes of the

argument. In the 911 recording, appellant and the complainant were yelling, cursing, and calling

each other names. Appellant asked the complainant to give him all of her money, and she said

1 The complainant testified that appellant and her ex-boyfriend “didn’t get along. They had had a couple of fights and it wound up leading to murder.” She clarified that appellant did not murder anyone. 2 In the photographs, the cut is to the side of the complainant’s stomach area. We will refer to “stomach” because that is the term used below.

–2– she did not have any money. He threatened to cut her if she was lying and based on what the

complainant was saying, it appears that appellant was searching her pockets.

Appellant and the complainant “moved around the house” and at one point were fighting

in the complainant’s bedroom and “tussling” over a clothes iron. The complainant said she “was

just picking up stuff trying to get him away from me” and “he threatened and said he was going

to hit me with the iron.” She said she “grabbed it so he couldn’t hit me with it” and as they

fought over the iron, it accidentally hit her in the head. Appellant also put his hands around the

complainant’s neck and pinned her against a wall; she could not breathe. He did this about three

or four times. All these incidents can be heard on the 911 recording.

The complainant ran to her aunt’s bedroom where she locked the door and climbed out a

window. She ran to the police car that was parked in the apartment complex parking lot. (The

officers had been going door to door trying to determine who called 911.) The officers saw her

and asked her if she was the one who called 911. She said yes. One of the officers described her

as “out of breath . . . [and] very underdressed for the weather, very frantic.” She showed them a

cut on her hand, explained what happened, and took them to the apartment. The door to the

apartment was locked and appellant did not respond to the officers’ knocks. About that time, the

complainant’s sister arrived and unlocked the door for the police. The complainant and her sister

gave the police consent to search the apartment. They found appellant hiding in a closet in a

bedroom. He was arrested without incident.

The complainant’s sister testified that the complainant was “crying hard” when she saw

the complainant at the apartment. The sister saw marks on the complainant’s neck and stomach

and said they “looked like scratches.”

After appellant’s arrest, the complainant gave the police a written statement about what

happened. She stated:

–3– I had got on Facebook he seen messages on my sister page from my ex and got mad he grab my hands and twisted them and I went in the room. He came in 30 mins later and start pushing and hitting me. I ran to the kitchen and got the knife, he took it from me and then poke me in my stomach. I grab the knife he told me to let go before he cut my hand. I didn’t let go and he intentionally cut my hand. I was trying to fight back then gave up as he repeatedly hit me and my head slap me and bang my head against the wall. He was choking me as well were I could not breath and I was really fearful for my life and my child cause I am 8 1/2 months preganant.

The complainant testified at trial that one of the police officers told her to write that she

“was really fearful for my life.” She said she “was really just trying to scare [appellant] with the

knife. It wasn’t because I was in fear.” But she also testified that she was screaming at appellant

during the entire fight telling him to leave her alone and to leave the house. When asked if she

was scared, she said, “Yeah, sort of.”

While appellant was in jail awaiting trial, he made several telephone calls to the

complainant; the State played portions of those calls for the jury. In those calls, appellant told

the complainant that she had to file an affidavit of non-prosecution so the State would drop the

charges. He coached the complainant about what to say to the prosecutor and how to explain the

“misconfusion” about the knife. He said he had “a plan” and that she could “at least” sign an

affidavit of non-prosecution; he said she did not have any “black eyes or nothing.” They also

talked about how she was going to explain the cuts.

The complainant testified that she talked to a victim advocate about filing an affidavit of

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